Sidewalk Infirmary Forgetting Its Own War

What slugs fall apart
On our sidewalks?
Their eyeless
Destruction and left
Path of glue
On the cement progress,
The veins of Our Earth.
I think its clay red skin,
And gasoline eyes
In a limbless five-year old.

What Heaven will account
Such slaughter as righteous?
What would we do
To someone who did
That to a child
Who lived on the next block?
And nevertheless its satisfactory in War.

Human art is sculpted
On the dusty surface
Of history's table.
Occasional chips
In the lacquer reflection
Reveal the dead tree
At the center of
The construction.
Plastic raincoat
To keep out the termites.

More eyeless feeders.

We think they are so blind,
With carbombs and cellphones
And messages from God.
What is it the blind
See? A child of American
Ingenuity, the crust of
Western civilization
Burned on a dead surface?

Maybe an overflowing
Bodybag buried inside
The gates of Abu Graib?

Maybe War Criminals
Asking for a piece
Or maybe just peace

When the money runs dry?
Maybe politicians
Planting coalitions
On carcasses, a sure
Measure of success?

the oregon trail has failed
you in your
faith healing death,
God’s odd way to welcome
you to Antelope country.

The Way of the Rain

What language was that
Drifting across
The grey fabric
Of your leg?

The uncovered spaces
Near my eye
Still ache
From the dull wind,
Someone left a pin
In there after my birth.

The entire sky
Is a cloud,
The earth a skin,
a coagulant
Corpse. It's twelve
Pieces of skin.

What we think of as dirt
Is covering
worm meat in
radiated chicken,
pink and isolated,
Its surface burned
From a boiling torture.
Some veins sicken the air.
We make feathers
Into hemlock tea,
And all the questions are
dusted for wax works.

If I were to weigh the rain,
and lay down in your sleep,
all the decay would be lifted
From this infirmary.